Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Jumping in - What about humanities and foreign language? The FL teacher teaches the same kids for multiple years and knows them well. The math and science teachers don’t really know my student even though they are doing well in those AP classes.
I think FL would count as humanities.
Anonymous wrote:Our school specifies it has to be a teacher from Jr year and it has to be one from Science/Math and the other English/Hist./Humanities/religion
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Jumping in - What about humanities and foreign language? The FL teacher teaches the same kids for multiple years and knows them well. The math and science teachers don’t really know my student even though they are doing well in those AP classes.
I think FL would count as humanities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kid wants to study humanities and plans to ask 2 English teachers for letters of recommendation. These teachers both taught him junior year in different classes (AP and a niche area), and have the best relationship with him inside and outside class. Other teachers (STEM, history, lang) don’t know him as well and probably wouldn’t add anything other than generic to his application. What do you think?
The problem is that there are plenty of humanities with a quantitative component. Political Science will need the ability to analyze polling and other statistical data. Economics...well of course that will be quantitative. Many history classes will involve looking at historical economic data or other data fields.
This is why having 1 STEM and 1 Humanities HS recommendation generally always make sense.
I suppose if your kid is going to be a Creative Writing major, that might be quite different.
Anonymous wrote:Kid wants to study humanities and plans to ask 2 English teachers for letters of recommendation. These teachers both taught him junior year in different classes (AP and a niche area), and have the best relationship with him inside and outside class. Other teachers (STEM, history, lang) don’t know him as well and probably wouldn’t add anything other than generic to his application. What do you think?
Anonymous wrote:Jumping in - What about humanities and foreign language? The FL teacher teaches the same kids for multiple years and knows them well. The math and science teachers don’t really know my student even though they are doing well in those AP classes.